The Night that Arik Sharon and the Zionists set the fascist wolves onto
Palestinian women and children
Perhaps
the most haunting memory I have concerns the visit I made to Lebanon in the
summer of 1979 at the invitation of the PLO. We were refused visas by the
London Embassy of Lebanon and instead had to travel via Syria across the land
border. I was on a delegation from the British Anti-Zionist Organisation.
At
that time Lebanon was still in the throes of a civil war. In June 1976, with
the United States and Israel having given the green light, Syria
invaded Lebanon in order to ensure that the Phalangists and their Maronite
allies weren’t defeated by the combined forces of the left in the Lebanese
National Movement, which the PLO supported, somewhat reluctantly at first.
The remains of Tel al-Zataar refugee camp which was destroyed, along with its inhabitants in 1982 after the Phalange besieged it, with the support of Syrias Baathist government |
There
are still some fools who have illusions in the Syrian Ba’ath Government. But when the Palestinians and their allies
were on the brink of power in Lebanon Syria, with the full blessing of Saudi Arabia
and the Arab League, invaded Lebanon to prevent their triumph.
In
1979 there was a vacuum in Lebanon. No group held power. The leftists, Druze, Palestinian,
Shi’ite and Murabitoun, the Sunni Nasserist militias held power in West Beirut.
The Phalange and Christians occupied East Beirut.
Ariel Sharon, Defence Minister and mass murderer who was personally responsible for the massacre at Sabra and Shatilla. He was also best friend of Shimon Peres, leader of the Israeli Labour Party |
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A
member of our delegation and myself decided to visit what remained of the refugee
camp Tel al-Zatar in East Beirut. It had been subject to a 3 month siege
from June till August when it fell to the fascist forces aided by Syria. Up to
50,000 lived in the refugee camp and an estimated 4,000 Palestinians were
massacred by Syria’s ‘Christian’ allies.
To this day thousands of the dead remain
unaccounted for.
Our delegation to the PLO in 1979 |
In
order to see what remained of the camp it was necessary to cross the border, a
veritable no-man’s land with the Lebanese Army dug in, between West and East
Beirut and we had to get 2 taxis as no taxi would cross into hostile
territory. On our way back we were
detained by the Lebanese army because we had no visas in our passports.
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We
explained to them that we had come to Lebanon at the invitation of the Syrian
occupying power, which was technically true! After about an hour or so we were
released since the Lebanese army was de facto under the control of the Syrian
military.
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Whilst
in Beirut we were given tours of the camps including sewing and woodwork
workshops. There are a couple of photographs here. It is a sad and sobering thought that most of
those we met would have been butchered just 3 years later because of the utter
stupidity of the PLO and Arafat in leaving the camps undefended and taking the
word of the Zionists and their American backers to protect the camps. It was criminal
irresponsibility not to ensure that if they had to leave, that sufficient arms
weren’t left behind to ensure that the camps would remain protected.
children playing in the streets and alleways of the refugee camps - 3 years after this photo was taken most if not all of them would have been slaughtered by Israel's Phalangist allies |
On
6th June Israel invaded Lebanon. The pretext was the attempted
assassination of the Israeli Ambassador in London, Shlomo Argov. In fact the assassination attempt had nothing
to do with the PLO and was the work of the Abu Nidal group, which had been
expelled by the PLO and which was the creature of Iraq’s Ba’athist government.
In any event it was a pretext and Argov himself later condemned the invasion.
The remains of Tel al-Zataar refugee camp which was destroyed, along with its inhabitants in 1982 after the Phalange besieged it, with the support of Syrias Baathist government |
Israel's
invasion of Lebanon began June 6, 1982. Following the assassination of the Lebanese
President Bashir Gemayel on September 14th, whom Israel had imposed
on Lebanon and who Syria is widely suspected to have assassinated in a car
bomb, Israeli troops entered and occupied West Beirut, contrary to all its
previous promises.
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A deal was reached between
the PLO and Americans whereby the PLO troops left for Tunisia by ship and the
US promised to defend and protect the Palestinian refugee camps. Once again the
PLO believed American promises although of course their position by then was
extremely weak.
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On September 16, 1982, the
Phalangists, fascists who were known to harbour a deep hatred for the Palestinians,
entered the Sabra and Shatila refugee camps in West Beirut. The excuse for
allowing the Phalange to enter the camps was that the PLO had left hundreds of ‘terrorists’
behind. The Phalange
massacred an estimated 2,000 civilians.
The
Israelis fired flares throughout the night to light up the killing fields -
thus allowing the militiamen to find their way through the narrow alleys of the
camps. The massacre went on for two days. When the massacre had Israel
supplied the bulldozers to dig mass graves. Refugees who had escaped to the
perimeter of the camp were turned back by the Zionist soldiers.
Israel
in the form of its Prime Minister, Menachem Begin tried to excuse their
behaviour by blaming it on the ‘Christians’ but it was like putting a
rattlesnake in a baby’s cradle. It was inevitable that the Phalange would
perpetrate a massacre.
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Israeli
troops surrounded the camps to prevent the refugees
from escaping. In Israel a 300,000 demonstration was held to protest the
massacre and the government set up the Kahane Commission. In 1983 Ariel Sharon,
the Israeli Defense Minister, was held to bear "personal responsibility" for
the slaughter. However this was a whitewash.
The decision to invade Lebanon and then Beirut was a collective decision
of the Israeli cabinet, not least its Prime Minister Menachem Begin.
Many
people thought that Sharon’s career was over but I predicted, and unfortunately
I was right, in an article in Tribune, that Sharon would sooner or later come
back as Prime Minister. I was right and this most bloodthirsty of monsters came
back in time to trigger of the Al Aqsa Intifada.
It
is worth reminding ourselves that all the Israeli Zionist parties, from Likud
to the ‘leftist’ Mapam and what became Meretz, supported the invasion of
Lebanon. Only Israeli anti-Zionists were opposed from the start though, as the
Lebanese resistance took its toll, more and more people began to oppose what
happened.
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Perhaps
the most famous opponent of the war was Dov Yermiya, a reserve
Lieutenant Colonel who openly condemned Israel’s bombing of Ain al Hilweh refugee camp. He said it
reminded him of World War II. Because of his open criticisms of the war he was
dismissed and he later wrote a War Diary of describing what he had seen. Dov
died aged 101 and shortly before his death he announced that he had rejected Zionism.
He said of Israel that ‘we have become a
nation of savage thugs.’
For further information see
Sabra
and Shatila: New Revelations on
America’s complicity in what happened.
Below
is a personal testimony as to what happened by Dr Alfout Mahmoud.
Two Palestinian women walk past the dead bodies |
Continuous Terror
by Dr. Olfat MahmoudIt was 10 am on Wednesday, September 16, 1982 and I was on duty at Accra Hospital, one of the Palestinian hospitals for Palestinian refugees in Beirut, Lebanon. The Israeli occupation of Lebanon was ongoing and the camps were surrounded by Israeli troops. Throughout the night we had heard stories of terrible things happening in Sabra and Shatila camp just adjacent to us but did not believe them.
“Suddenly we were interrupted by the sound of intense
gunfire at the hospital entrance. The foreign nurses urged us all to leave
immediately as they were not in danger and could care for the patients. The
Lebanese militia were attacking from the position the Israelis had just
vacated. Several other nurses and I were on the ground floor. We ran to a
window at the back of the hospital, with seconds to spare we clambered out and ran
into the garden of a villa behind the hospital. The front gate of the villa was
locked; the only way out was over the fence. Once over this, we ran for our
lives towards the bridge and then scattered.
We heard that Lebanese militiamen had also killed nurses
at Gaza Hospital located inside Sabra and Shatila camp. The foreign nurses and
doctors there testified on the Saturday morning, as militiamen were marching
them down the camp's main street, they saw hundreds of mainly women and
children under guard sitting by a large and recently dug pit. Soon after this,
they heard repeated shooting for 10 minutes or more, accompanied by screams and
cries.
For two days and nights after the massacre, I slept as
if in a coma. I had nightmares filled with the people who'd been slaughtered,
all the people I'd known and loved and who were no longer there. When I finally
woke up, I found a black cloud of grief and despair had settled around me.
Nothing could shift it. It was shot through with flashes of terror that at any
moment soldiers would come crashing through the door to kill me and my family.
I couldn't bear to listen to the news, and I would cry easily. I just wanted to
run away from everything, but my limbs felt too heavy to move. My body was like
lead. And my throat was constricted constantly.” *
This is part of my memory of the massacre that
took place in the Sabra and Shatila camp in Beirut, Lebanon 38 years ago. Over
2,000 women children and old men were massacred. I can never forget this and
nor can all those who witnessed it and were survivors like me.
The tragedy of Sabra and Shatila was and still
is a powerful reminder of the occupation of Palestinian land. It is a powerful
reminder of the failure of international efforts to find a peaceful settlement
to Israeli illegal occupation and to the Palestinian refugees’ endless cycle of
displacement. This massacre is only one of the terrible massacres that have
affected Palestinians but for me it was and is still an unforgettable traumatic
event. Many survivors continue to live in Sabra and Shatila, struggling to make
a living and haunted by their memories of the slaughter. To this day, justice
has not been served for the war crimes that took place there despite efforts to
take this massacre to the International War Crimes Tribunal. It serves as a
powerful and tragic reminder of the vulnerability of Palestinians and
Palestinian refugees.
On August 4, 2020, the Beirut port suffered from
a terrifying and devastating blast that killed over 200 people, made homeless
around 300,000 and caused extensive damage to the city. I have been through
wars and the massacre but as I heard the shattering of glass, and the movement
of the house, I was truly terrified and initially thought that the house was
collapsing around me. Just few weeks after that, a new fire erupted in the
port. All what happened and is still happening, brought back the painful
memories of Sabra and Shatila massacre.
When Sabra and Shatila massacre happened and the
killing and slaughter ended, its effects lived on. People were terrified and
children would scream whenever they saw the army passing by. Now, after these
recent tragic events in Beirut the consequences remain. The sound of breaking
glass causes my heart and others to stop with fear. When the fire erupted in
the port last week, we all started to open the windows and doors hoping to
minimize damage from an expected blast. Many left their houses in terror. Even
though we were still under the pressure of widespread cases of COVID-19 and the
streets were crowded.
As years pass people in Lebanon, including us
Palestinian refugees, continue to witness tragedies that bring back terrifying
and tragic memories. I always ask myself, why are innocent people dying because
of greed, negligence, corruption, brutality, and lack of humanity? In the face
of this ongoing and overwhelming despair my solace comes through my
humanitarian work to fight for justice and dignity for Palestinian refugees. I
call on people everywhere to fight for justice in whatever way what they can. I
have also found strength in prayer and my religious beliefs and so I pray daily
for peace and justice for my people and for the other 80 million of refugees
and displaced people in the world.
*This is an excerpt from Tears for Tarshiha by Olfat Mahmoud
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